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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 27, 1932)
THURSDAY, OCT. 27, 1932. PLATTSHOUTH SEM - WEEKLY JOUENAL PS3 in J Red's Oarfor Shop I" !f .-is in uuier j ftii reau Federation will 1 1 activities iu Lincoln Hair Cut 25c Shave 15c 5 Cass County Farm Bureau Notes j j Copy furnished from Office . cf County Agent Wainscott 4 TCT.,.......... Use Cod Liver Oil to Build resistance Cod liver oil builds up resistance in the poultry Hock, according to the Nebraska Agricultural College. It le.-ens the danger of outbreaks of roup, chicken pox and other disease; common to hens that are conlined during the winter. Egg thills are maue stronger ana natchability 01 eggs is improved through the use of cod liver oil. A timple way to feed cod liver cil is by mixing it in the mash. In mix ing home made mash first thoroly" mix the oil with the brar., then thoroly mix the bran with ether in grediont3. Use one per cent or one pint (one pound) to each ICO Ihs. of r.ll:u. Instead of waiting until the hen'. system is weak and craving tod liver cil, it is more satisfactory to feed it early and before the hen's system evtr becomes run down. Start feed-!. ing cod liviT oil as soon as the hens are home in the fall and continue to feed it thruout the winter. It is be ing fed all year by a good many poultrymen who insist it pay.-. Keep it before the hens in the mash. Tentative plans were approved this eek by the committee in charge- of e meetings and will be submitted to th secretaries of each, organiz ation for their approval. As in other years, the Farm Bu- open the weeVs on Monday, ac cording to C. 13. Steward, secretary ot the organization. The Hall of Agricultural Achievement program will probably be scheduled at the Monday general meeting from one to two o clock. Regent Whitmore is to b3 honored this year and Samuel Avery will read or give the paper. P.-ir tic-ally every agricultural or goniziticn in Nebraska will have a part in the Organized Agriculture 2jict-tings. The annual Farmers Family Fun Feed will be held Wed nesday evening of the week. The program will include a nurancr 01 contests in which Nebraska farmers and their wives will compete. An nouncement of the contents will be printed and distributed in November :o that thocc who come to Organized Agriculture can enter hte contests early. GO. P. Delay is Assailed by Gov Roosevelt Refers to Tour Horsemen' of Ad ministration in Speech at Ealtimore Armory. 25. In the final on his swing Litercstinir Facts frcm Eccter's Day One hundred pounds of t hi mined milk proved to be equivalent to s pounds of corn and 11 pounds of tankage for feeding pig3 in tests conducted at the Nebraska College of Agriculture, Wm. J. Loeffel an pounced at the Rooter's Day pro cram October 21. Uased upon this test with corn at 14 cents per bushel and tankage at $30 per ton skim med milk has a value of 19c per hun dred pounds for rec-uVng pigs. Soli-feeding tankage with corn to pigs on siulan grass pasture mater ially increased the rate of gain, further announced Mr. LoefTel. Thir- :y-n 'e pounac or tankage saveu two bushels of corn i:i producing a hun- cm-: pounds or por. i ne it-cuing t! Sewing Ilachlne Clinics Summarized Eight sewing machine clinics held In Cass county last winter are show ing some excellent results. Ninety- two cf the one hundred and n of the pasture by rooting. I.i another test comparing full feeding with a grow in.; ration of grain on -udaa grass pasture it was found that the full fel pigs gained 1.39 pounds per head per day while tii3 n:gs nccivii g a limited ration gained or.! .43 cf a pound per head women who brought their machines and overhauled them at the clinics have reported the results cf tutir; day's efiorts and these reports have j been summarized for office records, j The women reported their machines as ranging in age from two to forty vears. Thirtv-eicht of them were over twenty years old. They found all manner oZ things which hinder ed the smooth working performance of thir machines, some of which were, needed cleaning, needed new parts, tension trouble, adjusting presserfoot, adjusting belt and bob bin. Four months later, 40 of there women reported the condtiion of their machine a? very good, 40 as good, one still needed new parts. The ladies reported overhauling 13 4 ma chines other than those taken to the clinics, and passing the information on to 139 other women. The Home Extension Agent is plan ning another series of sewing ma chine clinics to be held sometime this w inter. Anyone interested in at tending should report either to the farm bureau office or to the project leader of their extension club. L l-.-.p T'-ij nvvi n f f. -.n .-r rf vcur.d in favor of the full .30 of fee dirg. Anoter test upon which Locfi'e gave a Drogrers report had to uo with a comparison of pigs fed in the I dry lot and these fed in the corn j field. All of these pigs weighed on the average 7C pounds at the begin- ing cf the test. At the end of the Spending the Holidays at Home Christmas with its activities and pleasures will soon be here. Christ mas and its customs, house and tree decorations, homemade gift sugges tions and ideas for holiday recrea tion will consume the time of the project leaders at our training cen ters next week. Plan Organiz:d Agricultural I-Ieetisg-s. Organized Agriculture will be held in ea-tern Nebraska at the Col lege r,f Agriculture during the first v. tck in January and in five west ern Nebraska towns in December, according to an announcement made by V.. II. Brokaw, director of the colhge of agriculture extension scr vi . Ti.? Organized Agriculture mcet i; ' - at Lincoln will feature a one 1 r general meeting immediately :.:;; i .on each day and a full i'our "';y : -,ram for the 12 organizations inu-rcsivd in the winter sessions. 2ooifry fate HIGHEST MARKET PRICES PAID AT ALL TIMES IN CASK OR TRADE. BRiNG US YOUR POULTRY, EGGS. Soennichsen's FUltsmouth, Phone 42 month" the pig.; in the dry lot fed corn and one-third of a pound cf tar.kp.e per head daily had gained 40 pounds. Those pigs running in the ccrn field, hulking their own corn and eating one-third cf a pound of tankage per head daily had gained 3 6 pounds, nearly as much as those eating tankage, however, to pigs run ning in the corn field produced the largest gain, about 57 pounds. In another test designed to deter mine the quality of pork produced by different feeds it was found that soybean meal fed pigs produced c distinctly softer pork than those fed on corn, wheat or rye plus tankage. The carcasses from the pigs receiv ing wheat or rye plus tankage were firmer than those from the pigs re ceiving corn and tankage. Tigs receiving ground wheat gained more rapidly than those fed whole wheat, based upon the amount of feed required to prcdule 100 pounds of gain. As shown by tills test a farmer cannot afford to pay more than 1C per cent of the value of wheat for grinding it coarsely. ' In another test half the corn ra tion was replaced with rye. The variety apparently appeal to the pigs because they ate more grain than in a check lot. In this test ground rye was worth S4 per cent as much as corn where it replaced half of the corn in the ration. Tigs fed a combination of protein supplements gained faster than those fed only tankage as a supplement of corn, according to the results of oth er tests. All cf the protein mixtures effected a saving of corn ?nd total feed required to make 100 pounds gain. This experiment emphasizes the value of protein mixtures to the man who wishes to pu?h his pigs for market. Whether or not such combinations are more profitable than tankage depends upon feed prices, says Mr. Loeffel. The various proteins used in the different combinations includes cot tonseed meal, corn gluten meal, al falfa meal, linseed meal, poybean meal and tankage. Practically iden tical gains were made in the tests comparing cottonseed meal and lin seed meal in a tankage-alfalfa-nual combination. The gains made with the linseed meal combination proved to be slightly more economical. These were obtained in dry lot feeding. Ealtimore, Oct. campaign address through the west and south, Gover nor Roosevelt declared here Tuesday night lie is waging a war "against the four horsemen of the present re publican leadership the horsemen of destruction, delay, deceit, despair. The democratic presidential nom inee again accused President Hoover of preaching a "doctrine of despair" and concluded with the shouted as sertion that "the four horsemen have passed on their way." Tiie governor began by saying he appreciated his "wonderful recep tion ' in Maryland which he said in the days of the colonies "first pro claimed freedom of religious belief; and practice according to the dic tates of one's own conscience and soul." Governor Albert C. Ritchie he pro claimed "a worthy spokesman for this principle." turning to the campaign, the gov ernor said "no amount of hysteria on the part of a bankrupt republican leadership will divert the American people at the 11th hour from the de cision they have already reached." Mr. Roosevelt told h:3 audience at the Fifth regiment armory that it is no time to wait when the prosper ity and happiness of this country ij at stake. "Tho 'horseman of deceit," he said, 'is to cover the trail of the horsemen of destruction and de lay. "lie tells you things that are not true," said the governor. He attempts by misrepresenta tion and distortion of facts to blind your eyes, to destroy your sense of direction, to paralyze your power of motion. "The fourth 'horseman is the 'horsenen of despair.' He tells you that economic conditions must work themselves out. He tries to close the door of hope in jour face." Among the "destruction" which he said had been wrought the gover nor referred to the "unsound spirit of speculation" and asserted "the ad ministration gleefully gave encour- egemcnt" to it. The goverifor termed "one of the most inexcusable actions" of the ad nnriirtration its delay in taking measures for relief of the needy He held the president responsible for failure of a large economy bill to pass. Appropriation of $500,000 for the creation of the Wickershain commis sion was criticized by the governor, Omaha Bee-News. ON WAY EAST Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Creamer of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, are here for a visit with the relatives and friends, making a short stay at the home of Judge and Mrs. A. H. Dux bury and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Creamer, Mrs. Duxbury and Ed Creamer being brother and sister of Joe. The visi tors are on their way home from Call fornia where they spent several months on the west coast with the mother, brothers and sister of Mr: Creamer. They have made the trip to and lrom the west coast by the auto route. Betty Gow is Back in Lindbergh Home as Nurse PLACE BAN ON CAES If ycu want to sell anytning, try a Journal Wani-Ad. Tha cost is small. The county commissioners of Otoe county have issued an order that a3 soon as the corn husking season is over, those who receive aid from the county must turn in their car keys and license plates to their automo biles. The commissioners, speaking thru Commissioner Herzog, states that in cases where it is necessary to possess a car to carry on work that the rule will not apply, but those who are working will be expected to look after themselves and not be a charge on the county. Mr. Herzog and Mrs. Arthur Thomas, county relief investigator, both declared that too many seekers after alms have automobiles which seem to require more care than their families do, states the Nebraska City News-Press. "Please remember, however," Mrs. Thomas said, "that the 'automobile problem' is not general. Most peo ple who receive aid are co-operating with us. Others are not. If they get alms it is my belief, and I think tax payers will agree, that they should not use automobiles except under certain conditions, seeking work for instance. Many complaints about the unre stricted use of automobiles by per sons who have been regular recipi ents of county aid have reached the county commissioners' office. Simi lar complaints have been made to the Citizens Committee for Relief which is wo.rking inconjunction with the county. "In one or two instances," a coun ty official declared Tuesday, "efforts have been made to actually trade 'grocery orders for gasoline. Mer chants on whom orders are drawn have shown the right spirit by re fusing to be parties to that sort of thing." Those beys and girls can't do good work without proper equip ment. Bates Book Store can sup ply every student need at the new low price levels. Back from Abroad to Norse Second Lindbergh Baby Named Jon Morrow Lindbergh. Englewood. N. J.. Oct. 25. With the Lindbergh kidnaping investiga tion suddenly revived by the arrest of Arthur Barry, de luxe gem thief, one of the principal figures in the mystery Betty Gow, the last known person to see Baby Lindbergh alive slipped quietly back into the country today after a visit with her mother in Glasgow, Scotland. The presence of the attractive Scotch nursemaid aboard the Anchor liner Caledonia, was not learned un til shortly before the ship docked, when she was recognized by a re porter. The young woman, who was sub jected to intermittent questioning for weeks after Charles Augustus Lindbergh, jr., was snatched from his crib, hurried from the pier after passing the customs examination and wa3 driven to the Dwight W. Morrow estate in Englewood. Betty will become nurse to the sec ond son of the Lindberghs, born six months after their first-born was ab ducted and killed. Coincident with her arrival intimates of the flier's family revealed a name for the new infant had been decided upon several days ago. He will be christened Jon Morrow Lindbergh. Jon, a Swedish name, apparently was chosen from the Lindbergh side of the family, while Morrow was chosen out of respect for the late Senator Dwight W. Mor row, father of Mr3. Lindbergh. Newark police, who have been striving to line up every possible wit ness in the Lindbergh case since Barry, the master cracksman, was trapped in his farmhouse hideaway in the Orange mountains near An dover, N. J., on Saturday, were keen ly interested when informed that the nursemaid had returned. But what steps they will take to ward having her confront Barry had not been decided tonight. It is un derstood, however, that Betty first will be invited to appear voluntarily. World-Kerald. Nebraska City Youth Burned to Death in Accident B. D. Utterback, Son of Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Utterback of Nebraska City, Bies Near Lincoln. Don't give your printing to out-of-town salesmen. Journal pay rolls are spent almost 100 per cent right here in Plattsmouth. ISlIjQ(g Weeping Water SATURDAY October 29 JUNE MARSHALL AND HIS ORCHESTRA PLAYING WWWWWWWWVWW Dallas D. Utterback, 135 No. 11 street, University of Nebraska stu dent from Nebraska City, was burn ed to death and Marie Brodigan, 2810 So. 14th street Lincoln, was injured severely when the car In which they were riding struck a cul vert, overturned in the ditch and burned two miles north of Havelock on highway No. 77 at about mid night Saturday. Utterback, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Utterback of Nebraska City, apparently was caught in the wreck age of the car and unable to get out after the accident. He was dead when found by passing motorists shortly after the accident. Utterback may have been Instant ly killed in the accident, bur ha burns appeared to be serious enough to have killed him if be did not die immediately. He was most seriously burned about the legs and lower parts of the body. Miss Brodigan suffered a broken left wrist, severe body bruises and possibly an injury to the head, ac cording to attendants at St. Elizabeth hospital. Her condition was not be lieved to be serious. She i3 the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Brodigan. Utterback was identified by his student identification card and pa pers on his person. He was also identified by four Talmage men who came upon the scene of the accident. They had known hiri for several years and recognized him. The Talmage men are Alvin Moel ler. Virgil Shields, R. S. Cleckner and Tom Armstrong. Utterback's body was taken from the wrecked automobile while the car was ablaze. Miss Blodigan was found stumb ling along the side of the road by first arrivals after the accident. She was placed in a truck until C. W. Newville, who was returning to Lin coln from Ceresco, arrived. Ke took Miss Brodigan to the hospital. On the way to Lincoln, Newville telephoned from the Robert Parrot farm, nearby, to Umberger's ambu lance and county authorities. Deputy Sheriffs Davis and Hug- hart, reported the car appeared to have etruck the 'abutment of the culvert and careened Into the ditch. liughart said the slippery road ap parently caused the accident, as the car tracks skidded toward the ditch. There probably will be no inquest, he said. Dr. McCall of Colon, appeared at the scene of the accident and exam ined Utterback and Miss Brodigan hastily. Utterback was a sophomore at the University. County authorities noti fied Nebraska City police who were to inform Utterback's parents of his death. Roosevelt in Happy Mood m " . 0 'IT, if m t " - - 2 '' s, I i Governor Franklin D. Boosevelt, Bemocratic residential can didate, is ictured in jojyons mood at East St Louis, Dl., on his latest swing through the country. WHEKE DOES UNCLE SAM GET HIS MONEY 1 "Where does Uncle Sam get his money?" is the big question answer ed in Chapter 3 of the Nebraska Tax Primer now being printed by the University of Nebraska. Chapter 4, when prepared in the next few days, will deal with Nebraska's source of revenue. from income tax and also from cus tom duties than te did a few years ago. Thru congress he therefore re sorted to further use of the excise taxes in an effort to balance the bud get. Citizens, particularly those of tho middle west, had been paying federal taxes unconsciously along with the purchaso price of imported goods. Nov.- that federal excise taxes have been placed on many common commodities the question "where Citizens of the middle west have 'does Uncle Sara t;et his money?" Is CLUB MEETS The Merry Workers club inet at the home of Mrs. Frank Topliff. Oct ober 14th. The roll call indicated 11 members and five visitors present. Our secretary read the minutes for us. Mrs. George Topliff and Mrs. Forest Leonard, our project leaders, gave the lesson "Keeping Clothes Wearable," - which was very inter esting. Our next meeting will be at the home of Mrs. Carl Kreager, Novem ber 10. Reporter. noticed lately that Uncle Sam does collect some federal taxes. Recently levied taxes on gasoline, oil, checks, auto accessories, cosmetics, sporting goods, entertainment, postaga and other thing3 have brought the mat ter to the attention of the general public. Income taxes, customs duties end excise taxes have furnished Uncle Sam with about 90 per cent cf his money in tho last few years, the Tax Primer Chapter 3 points out. In the year ending June 30, 1931, income taxes yielded almost two billion dol lars. Excise taxes brought in over half a billion and custom duties over a third of a billion dollars tho same twelve months. All non-tax revenues furnished Uncle Sam less than a third of a billion dollars. Nono of tho tax money paid on personal property and real estate goes Into Uncle Sam's pocket book. The only direct tax which the fed oral government laya upon the in dividual i3 the income tax. The in come tax is not much of a worry to Mr. Average Citizen in times like the present. L'ncle Sam collects less revenue much more alive in Nbraska than It might havo been a few years ago. TAXING PLACE OF N0REI3 Springfield, 111. Senator Norrls of Nebraska was ill, but another In surgent republican took his place on a speaking platform In behalf of Governor Roosevelt. On an hour's notice, Governor LaFollette of Wis consin left his home at Madison, 250 miles away, and ered to Springfield hy automobile. It was the first occa sion on which the younger LaFollette had espoused the candidacy of tha democratic presidential nominee, nl tho his brother. Senator LaFollette. announced support of ' Governor Roosevelt last week. Senator Norrls went to a hospital with a pevere cold and a painful throat Infection. Tho sena'.or protected againt canceling tho freaking date, but a physician admonished him serious complica tions might result If he did not en ter the hospital. Dr. Franklin Maur er advised him the condition was not serious, but might become so. Phone the news to No. 6. cosoooeQoeoooooccossoccsccooosoesocoe SPECIAL! ooc5 Oct. 29 to Nov 12 Only Regular 5 $ Pictures at Size 3x4 Not less than One Dozen made. PER DOZEN ' UcFARlAfWS STUDIO An Extra Charge for More than One Person - Northwestern, Purdue Play 7-7 Tie 'i ar ' 9 - i X?fefk .VVst 4r i$f4$l ,rv..r. fit ma. b&xSiJuil'S2. .ijr:. Xorthwestern battled those fighting Boilermakers f rom Purdue to a --tie in their game at Dyche Stadium, at Evanston, 111., although the invaders three times missed chanc es to score by narrow margins. Here Kawal, Purple quar terback, is shown stopping Hecker, Purdue left halfback, on a n attempted end run in the second quarter. Horstman and Purvis, Purdue backs (in dark jersey), are trying to block out Kawal. Dilley, Purple guard (Xo. 34), and Olson, Xorth western fullback (Xo. 25). Thirty-seven thousand fans wit nessed the game Saturday. -. -j